Employee Blogs Continued
Following on from our update on 16 June 2007, in which we referred
to the four employees who had been sacked for gossiping, articles have
recently appeared in the UK press focusing on the Internet “gossip”
sites Facebook, MySpace and Bebo.
According to the Telegraph newspaper, more than 70% of businesses in
the UK have now banned the social networking site Facebook. As a
spokesman for the Metropolitan Police commented, “there is no business
need for employees to access them [social networking sites]”. Many
employers, therefore including the Metropolitan Police, British Gas and
Lloyds TSB, have all installed Internet filters to block access to the
sites.
In the UK alone, Facebook has an incredible 4 million users and
approximately 30 million users worldwide. Employers are now
increasingly concerned about the amount of time that employees are
spending on such sites and many employers are implementing additional
IT policies to make it clear that disciplinary action and potentially
dismissal may follow, should employees be found to be accessing these
sites during working hours.
Of course, as our previous update highlighted, the amount of time
that employees are spending on such sites is not the only concern. An
ever increasing number of employees are openly gossiping about their
workplaces or colleagues on these sites, exposing themselves to
potential disciplinary action or defamation claims as a result. Whilst
employees may be aware that their employers are concerned about the
amount time that they are spending on these sites, they may not be
aware that employers are also concerned about the content of these
sites and will take a dim view of any inappropriate comments.
Further, many employers are checking these sites for information
about potential employees as a form of pre-screening. Inappropriate
photographs and/or comments may in future be relied upon by employers
to refuse or withdraw job offers.